Poet List 1346, elizabeth Coleman, 3. 1347, elizabeth Daryush, 7. 1348, elizabeth Dhillon,2. 1349, elizabeth eleanor siddal, 14. 1350, elizabeth Harris, 2. 1351, elizabethHoch, 2. http://www.poemhunter.com/p/t/l.asp?p=68&l=All
Siddal, Elizabeth Eleanor Information Sites Reviewed siddal, elizabeth eleanor sites, by people who know siddal, elizabetheleanor and work with siddal, elizabeth eleanor. ARTSorgs.com. http://www.artsorgs.com/ArtHistory/Artists/S/Siddal,ElizabethEleanor/
Victorian Art In Britain elizabeth eleanor Rossetti nee siddal 18291862 The unhappy woman whoinspired, loved, and was loved by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.Lizzie http://www.victorianartinbritain.co.uk/muses/siddal.htm
Extractions: The unhappy woman who inspired, loved, and was loved by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.Lizzie Siddal was brought up in London, the daughter of a Sheffield cutler who had moved South. Her father seems to have been a self-employed small businessman. She was first spotted by Walter Howard Deverell an associate of the Pre-Raphaelites working in a milliners shop. Deverell was so taken with her striking appearance, that he enlisted the aid of his mother to recruit Lizzie as a model. She became a favourite early model of the PRB, who referred to her as Guggums or The Sid. The first really famous painting in which Lizzie appeared was Ophelia, by John Everett Millais. The subject of the painting is Ophelia, in Shakespeares Hamlet drowning herself, after Hamlets murder of her father. Millais purchased a ladys dress of great age for the large sum of £4.00, and Lizzie posed in it lying in a tin bath full of water. To heat the bath, the painter placed it on tressles with oil lamps underneath. Unfortunately the preoccupied painter failed to realise the lamps had gone out. The water then went cold, and poor Lizzie caught a bad cold due to the low temperature of the water. The painting is quite simply one of the greatest produced anywhere in the 19
Elizabeth Siddal Home . elizabeth eleanor siddal (18291862). elizabeth Lizzie siddalwas the living, breathing epitome of the Pre-Raphaelite woman. http://members.tripod.com/preraphs/people/lsiddal.html
Extractions: Home Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal (1829-1862) E lizabeth "Lizzie" Siddal was the living, breathing epitome of the Pre-Raphaelite woman. With her sensuous full lips, heavy-lidded eyes, and above all her incredible waist-length auburn hair, she could only be described as a "stunner". S he was discovered by Walter Deverell in a milliner's shop in 1850. At the time he was searching for a model for Voila in his painting Twelfth Night. Later he told William Holman Hunt, By Jove! shes like a queen, magnificently tall, with a lovely figure, a stately neck, and a face of the most delicate modelling; the flow of surface from the temples over the cheek is exactly like the carving of a Pheidean goddess. Wait a minute! I havent done; she has grey eyes, and her hair is like dazzling copper, and shimmers with lustre as she waves it down. And now, where do you think I lighted on this paragon of beauty? Why, in a milliners back workroom where I went out with my mother shopping. Having nothing to amuse me, while the woman was tempting my mother with something, I peered over the blind of a glass door at the back of the shop, and there was this unexpected jewel. Art by date
Rossetti Sorrow and mental depression marred Rossetti's later years. In 1860 he had marrieda milliner, elizabeth eleanor siddal, whom he had been courting for years. http://www.angelfire.com/ok3/ay1/rossetti.htm
Extractions: ROSSETTI, Dante Gabriel He was born Gabriel Charles Dante Rossetti in London on May 12, 1828, son of the Italian-born poet Gabriele Rossetti. He was educated there at King's College and the Royal Academy. At the academy he met the painters Sir John Everett Millais and William Holman Hunt, with whom he founded the "Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood". Rossetti was strongly attracted to the dramatic and the supernatural. Among his earliest paintings was a scene of the annunciation, "Ecce Ancilla Domini". His art subsequently developed through other phases, in which the sense of human beauty, intensity of abstract expression, and richness of colour were leading elements. Rossetti began writing poetry about the same time that he took to the study of painting. One of his best-known poems, "The Blessed Damozel", was written in 1842. He also made a number of translations from Dante and other Italian writers. Sorrow and mental depression marred Rossetti's later years. In 1860 he had married a milliner, Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal , whom he had been courting for years. He immortalized her beauty in many of his best-known paintings, such as "Regina Cordium". Within two years the invalid Elizabeth died of a laudanum overdose, and Rossetti was grief stricken by the tragedy. In addition he was troubled by a bitter attack that had been made on the morality of his poems in an article entitled "The Fleshy School of Poetry," published in The Contemporary Review in October 1871. Rossetti's rebuttal was published as "The Stealthy School of Criticism" in the Athenaeum in December 1871.
Netscape Search Category - Siddal, Elizabeth Eleanor siddal, elizabeth eleanor, Get the latest Communicator. Search the Web or Ask a Question.Search the entire directory Search only in siddal, elizabeth eleanor. http://207.200.81.7/Arts/Art_History/Artists/S/Siddal,_Elizabeth_Eleanor
Extractions: Autos Browser Central Computing Entertainment Games Health International Lifestyles Local Guide Music News Personal Finance Shopping Small Business Sports Travel Weather Home Arts Art History Artists ... S Siddal, Elizabeth Eleanor Business Games Health News Recreation Reference Regional Shopping Sports World Specialized Searches See also: Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal WebMagick's Pre-Raphaelite Collection: biography and good selection of her works with comments Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web. Submit a Site Open Directory Project Become an Editor Last update: 10:59:51 GMT, Wednesday, October 27, 1999 Help Site Map Advertise with Us Add Site ... Terms of Service
Artnet.com: Resource Library: Siddal, Elizabeth siddal siddall, elizabeth (eleanor) (b London, 25 July 1829; d London, 11Feb 1862). English painter, model and poet. siddal, elizabeth (eleanor) http://www.artnet.com/library/07/0785/T078530.asp
Extractions: Siddal [Siddall] , Elizabeth (Eleanor) b London, 25 July 1829; d Twelfth Night Ophelia (1852; London, Tate). By 1852 she had met Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and by the end of the year she sat only to him. There are more than 45,000 articles in The Grove Dictionary of Art . To access the rest of this article, including the bibliography, subscribe to www.groveart.com . To find out more about this subject, click on a related article below and subscribe to www.groveart.com Reproduced by kind permission of Macmillan Publishers Limited, publishers of The Grove Dictionary of Art
Siddal - Links Fish, elizabeth eleanor siddal Rossetti at The Germ Victorian Mores the PreRaphaeliteVision. Fish, elizabeth siddal at the Cosmic Baseball Association. http://www.obscure.org/~dew/Siddal/Links/Links.html
Extractions: Elizabeth Siddal at the Cosmic Baseball Association. Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal - Her art and poetry at The Pre-Raphaelite Collection. The Complete Writings and Pictures of Dante Gabriel Rossetti: A Hypermedia Research Archive. Selected poetry of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Dante Gabriel Rossetti - His art and poetry at The Pre-Raphaelite Collection.
Elizabeth Siddal elizabeth eleanor siddal ~ the epitome of aesthetic womanhood to the three youngartists who founded the PreRaphaelite Brotherhood ~ was born on 25 July 1829. http://www.gothicpress.freeserve.co.uk/Siddal.htm
Extractions: Elizabeth Siddal Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal ~ the epitome of aesthetic womanhood to the three young artists who founded the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood ~ was born on 25 July 1829. Her mournful beauty appears time and again in their luminescent portraits. Her father was an ironmonger living, by 1851, off the Old Kent Road, Southwark. She had a delicate constitution not helped by the bohemian lifestyle of her fatal passion whom she married just two years prior to her death. Miscarriages and laudanum also served to shorten her life, which she devoted to art. In John Everett Millais's Ophelia she lies amidst the grassy water plants, her clothes spread wide and mermaid-like. Having lived as man and wife for a number of years they eventually married in 1860, but their union was not a happy one. Elizabeth Siddal's continuing ill health, and Rossetti's predilection for sexual experimentation outside of their relationship, compounded the short-comings and within a short time their marriage had begun to flounder. After two years of increasing marital stress, Rossetti arrived home one day to discover his wife dying. Elizabeth had taken a draft of laudanum, but had misjudged the strength of the tincture and fatally poisoned herself with an overdose on 11 February 1862. As she lay in her open coffin in the sitting room of their house in Highgate Village, the pallid complexion of death highlighting her golden tresses, Rossetti placed a manuscript parchment of love poems against her cheek. Elizabeth took these words to her grave.
Chapter Six. Canziani Edith Ellenborough Corbet eleanor FortescueBrickdale Anna Lea MerrittEvelyn de Morgan Emily Mary Osborn elizabeth eleanor siddal Marie Spartali http://www.bluffton.edu/womenartists/chapter6.html
Extractions: Rosa Bonheur, Herd of Sheep in the Pyrenees , n.d. Statement to users: In order to make this site useful to external users as well as to Bluffton College students, I have made every effort to find links on the internet. If you know of links that ought to be on this site, please e-mail me ( sullivanm@bluffton.edu and are password-protected. For ease of use, I have usually linked directly to images; however, at the bottom of the main chapter page or the "additional links" page I have given the site address so that designers of those pages can be given appropriate credit. FEATURED ARTIST: Julia Margaret Cameron (115 images)
Arts/Art_History/Artists/S/Siddal,_Elizabeth_Eleanor query using our intelligent search feature. / Arts / Art_History /Artists / S / siddal, elizabeth eleanor. elizabeth eleanor siddal http://www.arts-entertainment-recreation.com/Arts/Art_History/Artists/S/Siddal,_
Extractions: Search: Welcome to arts-entertainment-recreation.com, the comprehensive search portal dedicated to the arts. We have located some of the finest art and entertainment resources from across the Web and accumulated them into a single directory. Here you can choose from a wide variety of documents, reviews, articles, and Web sites about your favorite activities. Whether you enjoy film, Broadway shows, television, books, fine art, or travel, there is something here for you. As you peruse the directory, you will notice several categories pertaining to the arts. Feel free to navigate through these categories, from broad art-related topics to specific information on selected subjects. Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature. Arts Artists S Siddal, Elizabeth Eleanor Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal
Vers Libre [free Verse]: Authors - S Sexton, Anne Shakespeare, William Shelley, Percy Bysshe Shenstone, William Sheridan,Richard Brinsley Shirley, James siddal, elizabeth eleanor Sidney, Sir http://www.nth-dimension.co.uk/vl/author_list.asp?letter=s
Untitled Document Bennett. Shepard, Ernest H. (1879 ) Ernest Shepard famous illustratorfor Winnie-the-Pooh. siddal, elizabeth eleanor (1829-1862) http://www.rivier.edu/regina-library/resources/subjects/people-in-time/s.htm
Extractions: Carl Sandburg Margaret Sanger Siegfried Sassoon ... William Strunk Sandburg, Carl Sanger, Margaret (1879-1966) Brownsville Clinic and the Committee of 100 (1916-1918) Debate over Margaret Sanger : Human Life International Margaret Sanger Margaret Sanger : American social activist Margaret Sanger and Nahid Toubia : a virtual interview in the year 2066 Margaret Sanger : Creighton University Margaret Sanger : Parent to Planned Parenthood Margaret Sanger Papers Project : New York University Truth About Margaret Sanger : Planned Parenthood AutoBiography : excerpts from the Modern History Sourcebook Debate on Birth Control : digital project at Michigan State University Family Limitations : digital project at Michigan State University Plan for Peace : Birth Control Review (April 1932 : p. 106)
The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood She has seemed ready to die daily more than once a day' (WiseLawrence,Meg. elizabeth eleanor siddal Rossetti. The Germ). http://website.lineone.net/~digitalcrafts/prb.htm
Extractions: In 1849 Dante Gabriel Rossetti formed the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in reaction against the conservative theories and formal constraints of the Royal Academy where Rossetti had tried to study art but left in dissatisfaction. He and his disciples wanted to restore simplicity, truth, and vitality to art, the model for which they found in the works of medieval and Renaissance art before the rise of the Italian painter, Raphael, and hence the name Pre-Raphaelite. In general, the Pre-Raphaelites wanted to restore the following qualities to visual art : Fidelity to nature Truth in symbolic realism As the leading figure and founder of the PRB, Rossetti drew six other members into his fold: William Michael Rossetti (his brother), James Collinson (another painter), William Holman Hunt (painter), John Everett Millais (painter), Thomas Woolner (sculptor), Frederic George Stephens (art critic). Using Biblical images in many of their works, the PRB preferred symbolic detail to moral sentiments. Morris would soon become a member of this notorius group of painters. Later, because he was more of a pragmatic and practical mind, he moved into the direction of arts and crafts. He married Jane Burden, one of the Pre-Raphaelite " Stunners ," in 1859.